Virginia Woolf in Manhattan Read Online Free

Virginia Woolf in Manhattan
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confusion, although I was dazed, something started – a jolt of joy, which could not be stifled, small as a child set free in a hayfield, stunned for asecond then gathering pace, dancing across, the yellow dust flying –
    ‘
Kaar, Virginia
.’ A crow welcomed me back to the pavement where it pecked at a crack, pecked at the gap between the worlds.
ANGELA
    She almost died before her new life started!
VIRGINIA
    She dragged me – pulled me hard by the arm, I nearly struck her for her impudence – into a place that smelled of fried meat. I have always hated restaurants. Music I had never heard before – loud drumming & someone shouting – I placed my hands over my ears & said, ‘Where is the telephone?’
ANGELA
    ‘Please sit here, where you are safe. There are things I must explain to you, but first I will get some coffee – I don’t remember if you drank coffee?’
VIRGINIA
    The woman spoke as if she knew me!
ANGELA
    I mean, there’s been coffee since the eighteenth century, but God knows which modern kind she’d like, latte, cappuccino, Americano … Expresso seemed like the safest choice. Was there anything about it in the
Diaries
?
VIRGINIA
    ‘Yes, of course. I
adore
coffee.’
ANGELA
    I came back from the counter balancing my tray and saw her, for the first time, clearly, from a distance.
    First, though old, she was beautiful. Very pale, drawn like a bow. Thin and tall. Her eyes, avid.
    Second, she was extremely odd. Two small children were staring at her, American children with little round bellies. She was like a great mayfly, long neck poking forward. Straggling limbs, her knees jutting out. Then two long feet like heavy boats that might float away from her altogether. Greasy grey hair pulled back in a knot at the nape of her long column of neck. She wore a long woollen suit that might have been tailored, but didn’t fit, as if she’d tried to shrug it off but then given up in embarrassment. Yet her long white hands and blue-white wrists had escaped, and couldn’t wriggle back in again. She didn’t look unhappy, but intensely self-conscious. At the same time, she was curious. Her eyes flicked up, her eyes flicked down. Her eyes went swooping round the room, hungry to see everything. I thought, what will she think of us? – Plastic surfaces, harsh colours, half-dressed people celebrating New York’s unnatural spring heat-wave.
    I brought back an expresso for her, and my normal creamy half-shot latte, which came in a rather attractive tall glass. Without hesitation, her starved bony hand reached across the table and closed on my latte.
    She left me the small, bitter cup.
    She got the cream, and I the grounds. Her tall angular shape between me and the window, a cone of darkness drinking my prize.
    Yes, I thought, we are in her shadow.
    I watched her grey-green orbs dipping and sweeping. She was almost in a trance. What was she learning?
    I saw she didn’t want to talk to me. Her mind was workingon its own, and her bony hands like sea-creatures scampered across the table-top, climbing the curve of her narrow glass (
my
narrow glass, I reminded myself), skating down to the base again, twisting the metal frame that contained it, lifting her tea-spoon, putting it down.
    And suddenly I remembered
The Waves
. ‘Let me sit here for ever with bare things, this coffee cup … things in themselves, myself being myself.’
    ‘Myself being myself.’ I knew what she meant. It was why I fled home and its social duties – why I fled Gerda, which makes me ashamed. Because I wanted to be myself. Was I myself in my writing, at least?
    Was I good enough to stand naked?
    She
was good enough. God, she was good. She even managed to write well about coffee.
    I watched her swallowing my latte. Yes, of course, she was ravenous. She was sucking it down in great raw gulps, as if she was trying to drink the world. She hadn’t eaten or drunk for decades!
    She said ‘Could you bring me another, please? Then I will telephone my
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